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  1. Sep 11, 2019 · In 1971, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of busing as a mechanism to end racial segregation because black children were still attending segregated schools.

  2. But overall, what the analysis implied was bracing: BPS couldn’t bus its way out of its problems. Today, nearly two-thirds of the Tier 3 and Tier 4 schools are in majority Black and Latino ...

  3. The plan was reexamined and reconfigured to include some concessions made by the school board and the Kelley plaintiffs and in 1983 the new plan, which still included busing, was introduced. However, problems with "white flight" and private schools continued to segregate MNPS to a certain degree, a problem that has never fully been solved. [49]

    • Charlotte Busing Seen as A Success
    • Protests Turn Violent in Boston
    • Voluntary Busing Programs Peak in 1980s
    • Historians Mixed on Busing's Legacy

    In 1971, the Supreme Court’s ruling in Swann v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Board of Education unanimously upheld busing. The decision effectively sped up school integration, which had been slow to take root. After the ruling, school integration in Charlotte, North Carolina was lauded as a success, with schools across the country looking to the city as a...

    Court-ordered busing faced a tougher battle in Boston after U.S. District Judge W. Arthur Garrity ordered the city’s public schools to desegregate in June 1974. Protests in the New England city erupted and persisted for months, sometimes turning violent. "More than 400 court orders would be required to carry out the busing plan over the next decade...

    Busing programs became voluntary in many communities following the passage of the General Education Provisions Actof 1974, which prohibits federally appropriated funds for busing. Berkeley, California was among the cities that continued a voluntary busing program. The plan, which led future Vice President Kamala Harris—then a kindergartner—to atten...

    In his book, Why Busing Failed: Race, Media, and the National Resistance to School Desegregation, Matthew Delmont, a professor of history at Dartmouth College, writes that the hot-button issue of the busing crisis was not about busing but “about unconstitutional racial discrimination in the public schools. … Judges ordered ‘busing’ as a remedy in n...

    • Lesley Kennedy
    • 4 min
  4. Jun 21, 2024 · The following recollections and analyses, drawn from several individuals participating in the Boston Desegregation and Busing Initiative, highlight that uncertainty and some of the specific questions that still fail to elicit a consensus answer — including whether, at its core, the experience of what’s frequently referred to simply as “busing” was good or bad for Boston.

    • Adam Reilly
  5. Jul 1, 2019 · Research on the end of court-ordered busing in Charlotte, North Carolina, showed that this resegregation increased arrest and incarceration rates of black male students. (There was not a clear ...

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  7. Jun 18, 2024 · In the end, busing was not a successful remedy for racial segregation even if it did fix some aspects of a biased system. We still have a long way to go. The school-choice program we have now is another well-intentioned attempt to achieve integration on a voluntary basis. That is a step in the right direction, but one with serious problems.

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